The problem with the, "they should've cut costs" argument is that this would ultimately still be a sinking ship. The ever inflating costs only became an issue because the revenue is dropping and there's no reason to believe that'll change for the better. You're only delaying the inevitable. Opportunity cost is a thing and for a company like Paramount, I guess they feel their money is better spent elsewhere than late-night. Paramount isn't exactly in a good position financially to keep throwing good money after bad. You know, hence the Skydance deal. Their movie business is a wreck (their highest grossing release this year will likely be a money loser), their streaming service is borderline irrelevant and their linear assets aren't much better.
Roughly 90% of Colbert's linear audience were over the age of 50. Younger audiences might watch a clip on YouTube, but they are not sitting through the entire show. The format is antiquated. It was conceived when there were 3 or 4 linear TV channels. Now there's endless choice. If you want an interview with a celebrity or politician, you'll find them online with zero edits for time slots ... or you could follow those people on social media outright. If you want to hear music, you have no shortage. If news and political rants are your thing, there's also no shortage. Worse off for the traditional late night shows, that competition is produced for a fraction of the budget. How many of those have 200+ staffers, a dedicated paid band and have to pull enough money to justify all of that and the Ed Sullivan Theatre? I can't think of any. That's a mindset from decades ago and is completely unjustifiable in 2025 as this content holds zero long term value. No one's watching late night episodes from years ago. If this show really costs $100 million/year, that money is better spent on content with long term value.
The genre is the issue, not the platform. Apple TV, Netflix and Peacock have all launched streaming-only talk shows and the only ones that have lasted even three years are Letterman's interview show, which has produced 29 episodes since 2018, and Kevin Hart's, which has 38 episodes since 2021. Jon Stewart had a show on Apple TV. By its fifth episode, it hit 44,000 viewers total. There are 16 year olds live streaming video games from their bedrooms to a larger audience than that. Trump didn't cancel Conan O'Brien, Samantha Bee, James Corden, Lily Singh, Chelsea Handler, Hasan Minaj, Oprah Winfrey, Larry Wilmore, Michelle Wolf, Amber Ruffin, etc. Maybe Trump did get Colbert cancelled, but if it wasn't this year, it was going to be soon. The writing is on the wall. Viewers did that and they'll take down everyone else still working in this antiquated genre.
One has to wonder if they had already decided on Colbert's fate when they cancelled After Midnight. They claimed they had renewed that show for a third season, but decided against it because the host bailed. If the show was successful, it makes no sense to not just hire a new host. At the time, I thought that was just a cover story to avoid "CBS cancels only woman in late-night" or "Taylor Tomlinson's show flops" headlines. I guess their decision does make sense if they already knew they were getting out of late-night entirely by 2026.
Last edited by Retaw (July 22, 2025 11:16 pm)